Posts

Showing posts from January, 2014

Making a spoon from a bent stick. Green woodworking delights.

Image
While spending Christmas/New Year in Albany, Western Australia, I gave a hand to help with some gardening in a friend's garden. (For those of you readers in the northern hemisphere, this time of the year is early summer. While you were hunkered down hiding from the cold singing carols around the fire in your winter woollies, we were having Christmas lunch at the beach under a gazebo to save us from the scorching sun.) One of the garden plants we were cutting back was a Eucalyptus caesia. This species of eucalypt is grown as a decorative garden plant, with silvery leaves, drooping foliage, and beautiful bright red flowers. In its natural habitat it grows in arid areas as a sparse spindly small tree or mallee. There are two main forms in cultivation: the really weeping version and a more upright version. The one we were cutting back was the more upright. The wood is very dense, even outside of its normal habitat. An example of the version with with a more weeping habit. Pic thanks to...

Experience the Joy of Wood at Earthwise, Jan & Feb 2014.

The next group of public workshops I am offering will be held at Earthwise, Subiaco, over the weekends of 18 & 19 January and 8 & 9 February 2014. What a fantastic line up! If your kids are cranky and bored with school holidays, the January weekend is set up predominantly to provide some great activities for kids to be creative: Make a Useful Carry Box. Make some Musical Instruments. Make a Three Legged Stool. Make a Garden Planter Box.    The January weekend also offers adults the opportunity to discover the wonders of the Dovetail Joint on the Saturday evening. Learn to cut your dovetails by hand - a very satisfying thing. They are not that hard to cut really, once you get your head around it! The Saturday on the February weekend is set up to offer the opportunities for young and old to be working side by side, with kids and adults together. We will have fun making Kitchen Spatulas and Salad Servers and  making Kitchen Chopping Boards . Saturday night on ...

Leather Edge Guards - a Blast from the Past.

Image
I love my growing array of nice axes and hatchets. Used for hewing, waste removal and other green woodworking tasks, like all edge tools they need to be very sharp. Edge protection both protects those edges and protects the people handling them. What better way to protect these sharp edges then by making leather edge guards? Hatchet edge nicely protected by the removable leather guard. This warms the cockles of my sentimental heart. You see, back in the late 70's and early 80's I was a youthworker and a leatherworker. At that time I was making belts, bags, sandals, hats, book covers, and many other items. Lots of this stuff was tooled to create decorative patterns, etc. I was also teaching leatherwork. That's a much younger me doing leatherwork back in 1977. In the late 80's I started making leather campaign chairs, and did this into the 90's. Throughout the 90's I made leather seat and back components totaling over 900 chairs for another furniture maker! Each c...